Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on MARITAL SATISFACTION: MAINSTREAM MEDIA AND PEER-RELATED PUBLICATIONS. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5-page paper compares peer-reviewed research with a mainstream media interpretation of it. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AS43_MTmarisati.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
media literacy of the general public. In this position, the writer is being asked to determine how accurate a mainstream media outlet is, when it reports on a peer-reviewed study.
For purposes of this model paper, weve selected the topic of marital satisfaction, with the original research article about "Workload and the trajectory of marital satisfaction in newlyweds" having been
published in the June 2011 edition of the Journal of Family Psychology. That study was examined in the Wall Street Journal in a presentation I found definitely lacking.
In this paper, researchers postulated that the association between workload and marital satisfaction depended on the circumstances that could impact a parent being able
to take on different roles (i.e., wife, mother and working mother). Furthermore, the authors believed that wives are more impacted by their workloads than husbands.
The researchers hypothesized that associations between workload and marital satisfaction depended on 1) how well the spouses liked their work; 2) parental status and 3) gender. In studying
169 newlywed couples over a four-hear period, the researchers found that, the higher the demand at work, the stronger the marital satisfaction. It got even better for non-parent couples: In
that situation, increases in husbands workloads had a positive impact on increases in marital satisfaction. But the same was not true among parent couples - in that case, a heavy
workload for the husband had a negative impact on marital satisfaction. What surprised me (and clearly the researchers) was that an increase in wives workload led to increased marital satisfaction.
That last one made me scratch my head, as it has been widely reported in both peer-related journals and the mainstream media that wives, even these days, are responsible for
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